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Max Holloway explains difference entering UFC 318 now fully committed to lightweight

Max Holloway explains difference entering UFC 318 now fully committed to lightweight

USA Today17 hours ago
Max Holloway feeling like a true lightweight ahead of UFC 318.
NEW ORLEANS – Max Holloway's return to the lightweight division looks to be a lot different than times prior.
Holloway (26-8 MMA, 22-8 UFC), a former UFC featherweight champion, who's moved up and fought at lightweight twice before, is having his third bout at 155 pounds this Saturday, taking on Dustin Poirier (30-9 MMA, 22-8 UFC) in the main event of UFC 318 (pay-per-view, ESPN, ESPN+) – which takes place Saturday at Smoothie King Center in New Orleans. Unlike before, Holloway's move to lightweight includes no potential return to 145 pounds, changing the situation completely.
"Oh yeah, for sure, I feel the difference," Holloway said at the UFC 318 media day on Wednesday. "For my last fight (at featherweight), you guys could see my cheekbones way more, I kind of looked like a skeleton, so I'm just glad here. You guys see the difference. People are talking about it about how big I am, how wide I am. It just feels good. I'm a Polynesian, a Hawaiian-Polynesian. I'm glad I get to show that Polynesian, big wrist, big ankles kind of thing."
Not planning on making 145 pounds ever again, Holloway has better adapted his frame to lightweight this time around. This change has freed him up, as he can now do things he couldn't do before.
"Just being able to focus on this camp and not even teeter tottering on the chance of, 'Oh, we might go back down,' we can do certain things, we can supplement in certain ways," Holloway said. "At the end of the day, these 155-pound camps are the best. I feel good. I feel great. I get to eat a lot more during camp. There were times at 145 where I was like, 'Oh, I want to eat' and then I jump on the scale, and I'm like 'Oh, sh*t. I can't do it,' so these 155 camps are way more enjoyable."
Holloway is coming off a KO loss to Ilia Topuria in a featherweight title fight last October. Some question Holloway's chances of getting himself into another title fight, given Topuria has also moved up to lightweight and is now the champion after stopping Charles Oliveira for the vacant belt.
"Blessed" disagrees with those skeptics, and think a good win over Poirier will put him back in the mix.
"If I go out there and have a (UFC) 300 moment, I'm right there for a title shot," Holloway said. "And if it's not for a title shot, I'm right there for a No. 1 contender shot, whoever it may be. First things first. I see the media, I see people talking, I see people chirping."
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ESPN shares player comps for top Iowa women's basketball recruiting targets
ESPN shares player comps for top Iowa women's basketball recruiting targets

USA Today

time26 minutes ago

  • USA Today

ESPN shares player comps for top Iowa women's basketball recruiting targets

As the 2025-26 women's college basketball season approaches, ESPN shared player comparisons for some of the game's top 2026 recruiting targets, including two that have the interest of the Iowa Hawkeyes. Coming off a year in which the Hawkeyes found their way back to the NCAA Tournament and notched a win, head coach Jan Jensen is continuing to reload the roster with high-level talent from the recruiting ranks. Iowa has transformed itself into a national player in the women's college basketball recruiting world and is now among the favorites for the nation's best. Kate Harping The first of the two top prospects discussed was 5-foot-10 guard Kate Harping, who attends Marist School in Atlanta, Georgia. In her junior year, Harping averaged a staggering 32.2 points, 10.6 rebounds, 5.1 steals, 3.7 assists, and 1.2 blocks per game, leading the War Eagles (29-3) to the Class AAAA state semifinals. According to the article, ESPN compared Harping to Florida State's senior guard Ta'Niya Latson based on her aggressiveness off the dribble and physicality at the rim that translates to superior scoring, rebounding, facilitating, and 3-point shooting marksmanship. Harpring is as aggressive as it gets off the dribble. Combine that with her physicality at the rim, and she looks a lot like Latson. Both score, rebound, facilitate and are respectable 3-point shooters. Latson led the nation in scoring last year with 25.2 points per game and has already eclipsed 2,000 career points in college. She had a reputation early as a player who attacks the rim hard, then rounded out her game by adding shooting range. She also averaged more than four assists and steals rebounds per game last season. Both players create easy offense by forcing turnovers via their defense ball pressure. Harpring is a capable shooter-she averaged 19 points, 6 rebounds and 3.5 assists in the 3SSB league-but prefers drives and pull-ups, so her natural evolution will come from beyond the 3-point line, much like Latson. - Shane Laflin, ESPN Harper is considered a five-star and ranked No. 1 prospect in the state, No. 1 in the point guard position, and No. 1 overall recruit in the 2026 class, according to 247Sports' 2026 Top Women's Basketball rankings. Given her top ranking, Harping holds 11 additional offers outside of Iowa, including some of the game's legacy programs, such as UConn, LSU, South Carolina, and Notre Dame. McKenna Woliczko The second of the two Hawkeyes recruits discussed by ESPN was McKenna Woliczko, who currently attends Archbishop Mitty High School in San Jose, Calif. The five-star, 6-foot-2 wing is ranked as the No. 6 player nationally by ESPN, On3, and 247Sports. According to 247Sports, Woliczko is the country's No. 2 power forward and the No. 2 player from California. On3 rates Woliczko as the nation's top shooting guard and as the No. 2 player from California. Despite an ACL injury ending her junior season, Woliczko has put up impressive numbers during her prep career, averaging 20.2 points and 10.3 rebounds per game during her freshman season and 22 points, 8.0 rebounds, and 2.0 blocks per game with Archbishop Mitty during her sophomore campaign. Regarding the article, ESPN compares Woliczko to Baylor's senior guard Darianna Littlepage-Buggs, highlighting her ability to play bigger than her size, aggressiveness on the glass, and confidence extending out to the mid-range, as well as her potential to improve her 3-point efficiency. Although Woliczko has missed some time due to injury since the high school season, her effort and motor have left major impressions among recruiters. Both she and Littlepage-Buggs (6-1) play bigger than their listed size, as they attack the glass and refuse blockouts by defenders. They're also nice shooters out to the extended mid-range, and are working to improve from deep. But the prevailing similarity between these two players is their effort and willingness to do whatever it takes to win. Littlepage-Buggs averaged 15 points and 10.4 rebounds per game this season for the Bears. Woliczko was a double-double machine in high school as well, prior to injury. - Shane Laflin, ESPN Regarding her recruitment, she named Iowa, Ohio State, South Carolina, and USC among the final four choices on June 12. She also scheduled her official visit to Iowa City over Labor Day weekend. While the two Iowa women's basketball prospects named amongst the 10 premier recruits named in the article will generate significant attention from competing schools, it is clear that the Hawkeyes are not afraid to go toe-to-toe with the nation's elite programs. Contact/Follow us @HawkeyesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Iowa news, notes, and opinions. Follow Scout on X: @SpringgateNews

CNBC Sport: MLB Commissioner says Sunday media rights could go to NBC, Apple — or back to ESPN
CNBC Sport: MLB Commissioner says Sunday media rights could go to NBC, Apple — or back to ESPN

CNBC

time28 minutes ago

  • CNBC

CNBC Sport: MLB Commissioner says Sunday media rights could go to NBC, Apple — or back to ESPN

A version of this article first appeared in the CNBC Sport newsletter with Alex Sherman, which brings you the biggest news and exclusive interviews from the worlds of sports business and media. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox. Welcome to the end of the slowest U.S. sports week of the year! Fortunately, I can help you fill the void a bit. In anticipation of the MLB All-Star Game, I flew down to Atlanta this week to chat with MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred . You can watch (or listen to) the wide-ranging interview in this week's On The Record, below. Manfred broke some news in our sitdown. He confirmed NBC, Apple and ESPN are the three bidders for the league's "Sunday Night Baseball" package, which ESPN opted out of earlier this year. Manfred told me he plans to choose a winner for those rights within the month and that they could be split up between two bidders. The reemergence of ESPN as a potential home for "Sunday Night Baseball" is both surprising and not surprising. It's surprising given Manfred's blunt comments after ESPN chose not to pay an average of $550 million a year for the last three years of the rights. "We do not think it's beneficial for us to accept a smaller deal to remain on a shrinking platform," Manfred wrote to MLB owners in February in a memo first obtained by The Athletic. That seemed to close the door on ESPN. And yet, here ESPN is back in the mix. Manfred may be able to strike a deal with ESPN without going back on his word to owners: He told me he's in talks to include five MLB teams' local rights in these renewed discussions. MLB currently produces and distributes local games for the Arizona Diamondbacks, Cleveland Guardians, Colorado Rockies, Minnesota Twins and San Diego Padres. If ESPN were to strike a deal with MLB, it would want those rights immediately – in time for the 2026 season. This isn't surprising. ESPN Chairman Jimmy Pitaro has publicly spoken about his desire to be part of MLB's long-term local solution as the league moves away from relying on regional sports networks for the majority of its local revenue. ESPN could pay more to get those local rights and include them with its soon-to-be-launched direct-to-consumer service. It will be interesting to see if MLB can get north of $550 million if it splits the package between two bidders. That could allow Manfred to not just save face with MLB owners but even score a win. ESPN sources tell me there's renewed optimism a deal can be struck with MLB – when a few weeks ago it looked like a long shot. One reason ESPN's return to the table isn't a shock — ratings for ESPN's MLB games are up 6% from last season, averaging 1.71 million viewers per game. That's the highest average audience at the All-Star break in eight years. Home Run Derby ratings this week were up 5% over last year. That aired on ESPN, and those rights are part of the vacated "Sunday Night" package for 2026-2028. Given ESPN's influence on American sports, it probably behooves MLB to stay in business with the Disney division. Now it'll be up to ESPN to pay enough to keep Manfred satisfied. A deal will almost certainly be just a three-year agreement, so that MLB can reorganize its media rights after the 2028 season. "Our goal would be to accumulate all of our rights (national and local), go to the table, and develop in concert with the potential buyers packages that are most valuable to them," Manfred told me. "I think our goals would be to have more national exposure, increase our reach. In addition, we think we have a cluttered environment right now. There's a lot of places you have to go if you're a fan of a particular team, and we think that we should strive to create a more fan friendly environment." Manfred also suggested that pooling local rights and distributing that revenue among all of MLB's 30 teams could replace the league's current revenue-sharing system. He was a little cryptic here, so I'll include the full back-and-forth: Alex : From a local standpoint, what do you need to do to get buy in from all of the teams to say, "You know what? It makes sense for us to give our rights to the league so that they can do what they want with it." Manfred : The best way to explain it, I think, is that when people speculate about this, they assume we're going to make this media change only. That is really not the case. There is a bigger set of changes involving a larger set of tradeoffs between large and small markets that I'm very confident will put us in a position to accomplish what we need to do. Alex : What do you mean? Elaborate on that. Manfred : Well, I'm going to be a little limited here. 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I asked Manfred about the two elephants in the room regarding that upcoming CBA: 1. Do you expect a lockout? 2. Will you push for a salary cap? He told me owners haven't "discussed" or "decided" either of those things yet. Still, he admitted the league has a competitive balance problem on its hands when it comes to team spend. "Sports sell competition," Manfred said. "We do have fans in a significant number of our markets who are really concerned about the issue of competitive balance and the competitiveness of the teams in their markets, and it's something we're going to have to pay attention to." I pushed Manfred a bit regarding the salary cap. Critics of a cap note it wouldn't solve arguably MLB's biggest spending problem – which isn't that the Dodgers or Mets spend too much, it's that the Pittsburgh Pirates, Athletics, Miami Marlins and other teams spend too little. A salary floor, rather than a cap, could force certain small-market owners to spend more on players. Manfred said he's open to a floor but cautioned a cap would probably come with it. "I do agree with the idea that a salary floor is an important part of the system, and in fact, every salary cap system also includes a salary floor. Rarely, however, in collective bargaining, do you get a change that goes only one direction," he said. I also asked Manfred about the potential of robot umpires calling balls and strikes. "The fact of the matter is, it's an automated system that helps the umpire," said Manfred. "The umpire doesn't become a robot. You know, he's still the man behind the plate that runs the game." And I asked him about expansion and how much he'd charge for potential expansion fees, given the WNBA just got $250 million per team for its three new teams. Manfred said he couldn't even estimate because "it would probably lowball where we'll end up being." He did guarantee it'll be a number in the billions. Also, for the A's fans (like myself) … Manfred said the Athletics relocation is now "resolved," and that the team is full-go to move to Las Vegas. "I was out there a couple weeks ago, shovels in the ground. We're going to Vegas," Manfred said. You can watch our entire conversation here . Or listen here and follow the CNBC Sport podcast if you prefer the audio version. CNBC Sport highlight reel The best of CNBC Sport from the past week: Media companies are increasingly elevating executives with a finance-first focus rather than a content-first outlook, reports CNBC's Lillian Rizzo . That could significantly affect the fates of which sports rights end up with which TV networks and streaming platforms in the future. CNBC's Julia Boorstin sat down with new PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp at Allen & Co.'s Sun Valley media and tech conference. Rolapp was previously the NFL's chief media and business officer. Boorstin asked him about the potential combination of LIV Golf and the PGA and how to grow the Tour's digital footprint. Portland's WNBA team will be called the Portland Fire – a callback to Portland's previous WNBA team that existed from 2000 to 2002. The team begins play during the 2026 season at the Moda Center in downtown Portland and has a new logo, reports CNBC's Ali McCadden . U.S. soccer legend Alex Morgan and NFL Pro Bowlers C.J. Stroud and Micah Parsons are backing a new company that makes premade peanut butter and jelly sandwiches called Jams. CNBC's Jess Golden reports Jams will be available exclusively at 3,000 Walmart stores nationwide. The big number: 38 That's how many home runs Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh has at the All-Star break – the second-most ever at the break and just one fewer than the record from Barry Bonds in 2001, the year he hit 73. Raleigh isn't even close to a household name, although his nickname – the Big Dumper – is gaining social media traction . I asked Manfred if there's anything he can do to jumpstart the star power of MLB's newer talents. "We think we've made huge strides in the last few years in terms of [social media] presence," Manfred said. "It's not just followers, it's engagement. How much engagement are you getting with that content that you're putting out there? So, you have to work at it. Some of our markets are obviously bigger than others, and it's easier. But when you have talent like Cal has, people are going to figure out who you are." Quote of the week "We don't feel quite the need to experiment with the game that maybe some other sports does, because ours is widely regarded to be the best of the all-star performance." — Manfred on if he'd consider a U.S. vs. World approach for the All-Star game, like the NHL has embraced and the NBA will adopt for next season. Around the league Pretty much every year, whatever media company has Super Bowl rights begins charging a record high price for 30-second TV commercials. Well, guess what? NBC already wants a record $8 million for a 30-second spot, AdWeek reports . While Fox Sports sold some spots for $8 million last year, Fox initially priced ads around $7 million, AdWeek noted. This year, NBC is going with $8 million from the jump – a figure that will likely rise as the game draws closer. I enjoyed this delightful episode of "Pablo Torre Finds Out" about the Malik Beasley NBA gambling investigation and the surprising link to Jontay Porter, the ex-NBA player who already pled guilty to a gambling scheme. The NBA is already exploring expansion opportunities, Commissioner Adam Silver said this week . He noted that he wants more clarity on the future of regional sports networks and local TV revenue before making a decision.

Daniel Cormier wouldn't be surprised if Derrick Lewis got UFC title shot vs. Tom Aspinall
Daniel Cormier wouldn't be surprised if Derrick Lewis got UFC title shot vs. Tom Aspinall

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Daniel Cormier wouldn't be surprised if Derrick Lewis got UFC title shot vs. Tom Aspinall

Daniel Cormier is throwing Derrick Lewis' name in the UFC heavyweight title mix. Cormier doesn't see too many options for UFC heavyweight champion Tom Aspinall's next title defense after Aspinall (15-3 MMA, 8-1 UFC) has already beaten top contenders such as Alexander Volkov, Curtis Blaydes, and Sergei Pavlovich. All signs are pointing to Ciryl Gane as Aspinall's next opponent, but after Lewis (29-12 MMA, 20-10 UFC) knocked out Tallison Teixeira in the UFC on ESPN 70 headliner this past Saturday, Cormier doesn't rule out the possibility of "The Black Beast" jumping the line. "Probably could (get a title shot), man, with the way the heavyweight division is right now," Cormier told MMA Junkie of Lewis. "He might get an opportunity. If all things were considered and you just need somebody to put on a show, a person that you know is going to bring the eyes, it's Derrick Lewis. "He really is going to bring more eyes than most in the division right now. Tom Aspinall needs challengers. Chael Sonnen told me that on our show, 'If Ciryl Gane so much as coughs, Derrick Lewis is going to get a title fight.'" Many, including UFC CEO Dana White, thought Lewis' TKO win over Teixeira was an early stoppage. While Cormier doesn't disagree, he gives referee Jason Herzog the benefit of the doubt. "I think (the stoppage) was bad, but when a guy grabs the fence to pull himself up you've got to do something," Cormier said. "You can't reset the position because he's getting finished. I think he made the right decision. We're pretty hard on these officials a lot of times, but I think under those circumstances, he was left with no option."

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